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[Music]
You see
your tomorrow.
[Music]
Okay. Hi everybody. Thank you for
coming. Uh first let me just announce
the
dedications. Uh the shar tonight is
dedicated uh for praying for the victory
of our soldiers in all fronts of the
war, the lasting unity of amra and for
all of those whose health has been
affected by the war and obviously for
the safe return of all of the hostages
who are still alive. Uh leotan elevation
of the soul for yeets
banzar. And then we have other
dedications Shaina Basster Mala and
Moshe Yitzk Ben Rifka Minva that they
should be Zoha to the braha of of
children uh dedicated by Malainkle. Uh
the entire series during the month of
Adar is sponsored by Reena and Mark
Welletow in honor and appreciation of
our graduates for the safety and success
of the Sahal and return of the hostages
and Nishmas Harav is
benfoil. And finally I wants to thank
all of those who have contributed to the
matan of fund. Many of the recipients
have expressed their gratitude and
brought so many sim for the but you know
again the cycle of stuck never ends.
So uh we hopefully helps people over
Purim but now we have to think about
helping people as we approach the
holiday of Pesak which is even more
expensive and uh therefore uh I guess
not this week but pretty soon there will
be what is called moim
uh which is the collection of funds to
give out for people to help them meet
the PES expenses. Um obviously uh I am
not in my regular time. I am here an
hour or an hour and a half early and uh
that is because my yeshiva that I work
Orsame we recently had the very great
tragedy of losing the founder of Osame
the Rosha yeshiva Ravniller of blessed
memory who founded Orsame more than 50
years ago and he had been ill for around
three years and he passed away shortly
before Purim and all of us are still
kind of in a devastated state but
Tonight uh shortly after the Shiva
there's a special memorial service uh at
8:30 and although you know technically I
could have had an excuse because I would
to be here but Rabbi Poston was kind
enough to
uh rearrange the schedule so I would be
able to return to our uh for the
memorial service and in addition to all
the dedications I'd like to exercise my
prerogative to also dedicate the sheer
lizer
uh
sadik
liv and again it's a tremendous
tremendous loss. Um the truth is most of
the present students in ars didn't even
know him that well because he had been
sick. He had not really been in yeshiva
except for Roshashana he would come or
something like that. Uh but for those of
us who have been around a little longer
uh he really was uh kind of a father. Uh
and many people expressed the idea that
they felt they lost a father. His office
was right next to mine and uh in his
healthy years, he would constantly pop
in uh to tell me a story or an insight
or a joke or whatever it would be. And
um it always had a point to it, meaning
it wasn't just entertainment, although
it was entertaining. Uh but he had all
sorts of beautiful, very deep insights.
A very, very brilliant man, not only in
Torah, but uh everything, politics,
history, uh baseball was one of his
specialties.
Um he knew high culture and he knew low
culture even Abbott and Castello you
know whatever it would be he had a whole
wealth of knowledge but he was able he
was able to draw on that knowledge draw
on every little bit of information that
he absorbed in his life and was able to
derive Torah lessons and I think that's
an important you know insight for us
something to aspire to you know we go
through different things we're not
always in a 100% Torah environment You
know we we deal with the secular world
in various ways but a Jew kind of learns
from everything. We try to learn from
every type of
experience says who is a wise
person that somehow we learn from
everybody and we take a lesson in how we
serve God and you know I think Rabbi
Schiller in his own life exemplified
that and that's one of the things he
passed down to us. So again, I'm very
grateful to uh Rabbi Poston uh for
rearranging. I know how difficult it is
to rearrange schedules and I do very
much very much appreciate this. Okay, so
uh we're dealing with uh the building of
the Mishkun. Now you might be wondering,
didn't we deal with that last week and
didn't we deal with that the week before
and didn't we deal with that the week
before that? Yes, and we're going to
deal with it next week, too.
Five parotes of the Torah, five weeks
dealing with the Mishkan. Gee, we know
that the Torah is very economical when
it comes to words. The Torah does not
convey things in two words if it can
convey it in one word. And yet the
Mishkan on and on and on and on. Uh
every time you get a full length
repetition, God gives says it to Moshe A
to Z. And then it says Moshe tells it to
us A to Z. And then we do it A to Z. The
Torah could have just said the Jewish
people did whatever Moshe was told, etc.
But every single time it reiterates it.
And I'm not going to give you that. I'm
not actually that's not the point of my
talk tonight. I'm not going to give you
a full answer to this very difficult
question. uh other than to highlight the
obvious point that there's something so
central in the idea of Mishkan that it
bears constant reiteration and constant
repetition because remember the key
verse that inaugurated the whole
building of the Mishkan thei mikdash
make for me a sanctuary a holy place a
holy
space so I will rest in them. So the
commentaries make the point it doesn't
say God rests in
it. Rather the idea of a mishkun is the
idea of making a sanctuary in your heart
and in your soul for the almighty.
There's a famous beautiful song taken
from Rabbi Lazarus Kari this one of the
great cabalists in the time of the
aril in my heart I will conduct I will
construct a
sanctuary I mean was actually a
beautiful shaker melody about sanctuary
but say it's bas it's actually based on
this
idea that is that's what life is out.
Life is
about making our heart and our soul a
dwelling place for the almighty, a
sanctuary for
God. Do we always live up to that?
Certainly not. I at least I'll speak for
myself. I certainly do not always live
up to that. But that's the aspiration
and that's why it's repeated over and
over and over again because the
fundamental ideas of life have to be
reiterated because maybe our head might
grasp it by learning it
once but to go from the head to the
heart is quite a long distance and
sometimes things need to be repeated,
reiterated,
integrated so they influence you, so
they elevate you and that's kind of
again it's not complete answer obviously
but this is part of what's going on with
all of this repetition about the Mishkan
the Mishkhan of course in the desert the
Mishkhan was a traveling sanctuary of
course once we get to Jerusalem we have
the beta mikdash but it the idea is the
same it is
symbolic of the presence of God in our
heart and in our soul and when God is
not in our heart and our soul the
building becomes a building in fact the
medish tells us when
destroyed the first
temple was very proud in his arrogance.
He said I have driven God out of his
house. And the metric actually has the
almighty speaking to saying don't think
you drove me out of my house. I didn't
live there anymore. When the Jewish
people no longer had God in their heart
and in their soul, I leave. So you
destroyed a vacant. It's a nice house,
nice hotel, but nobody was living there
anymore. That's the idea. Because
essentially God is in the temple when
God is in our heart. Therefore, when God
is not in our heart, God is not in the
temple. And that's why the temple gets
destroyed. Meaning you can't destroy the
house of God when God is there. But you
can destroy it when God isn't there
because it's simply an empty building at
that particular point. This is what the
medra says. God told Nukatnar one way or
or the other. So, first let me start
with a very very technical point. Uh I
know some people are very much into the
Jewish calendar. So you you would
appreciate this. Other people are not
into the Jewish calendar. They won't
appreciate this. But I'll just give you
a little technical point for those who
enjoy it. It'll only be five minutes.
And that is, you know, anyone who
studies the the Torah reading of the
week, the
paratva knows that uh sometimes two
parios are
combined and sometimes two partial are
separated. Uh and the normal rule is the
following. uh when we have a regular
year a non-leap year without an extra
month so the partiote will tend certain
partial will be combined because
otherwise you'd have too many parti for
too few weeks in leap years when you
have four extra weeks we separate now
vak pud this week's para and next week's
para are normally together on non- leap
years and they're separated on leap
years that's the normal pattern
Now this year is not a leap year. We
don't have a secondar. So you would
expect as it were that Vakob should be
read together because this is a non-leap
year. And yet lo and behold this is a
very comparatively rare instance where
even though it's a non-leap year the
yakil pakud are going to read two
different weeks this week and next week.
uh this could be called an anomaly so to
speak. It's a
yakl it is an exception to the norm. So
the rule is the following. This only
happens when there's a particular
configuration in the Jewish calendar
where Roshashana as it did this past you
know this year
5785 falls out on Thursday Friday
meaning Wednesday night Thursday Friday
and the month of Keshvan and the month
of which can sometimes have variable
29:30 both have 30
days and based on that when that happens
inevitably Pesak
The first seder is going to be Saturday
night mo Shabbat. So because of that
unique
configuration, there happens to be one
extra
Shabbat that's not covered in the Yumpt
because the Shabas is right before PES.
As a result, even though most of the
joined
parot are going to be joined, but there
has to be one extra Shabbat. Soak bakud
was chosen to separate. So just remember
this you can really impress your
friends. You can ask a friend because uh
not too many people know this particular
bit of bit of data and that is hey how
come you know are separate this year and
you will have the answer obvious
everybody knows when rash is Thursday
Friday and are both 30 days and
therefore the first su is Saturday night
you have one extra shabas in the whole
year in which the parot have to be
separated in order to cover that shabbat
and you will be you people will be very
impressed with your with your knowledge
and your area edition. Okay, little
technical point for those who enjoy the
Jewish calendar. But what I want to talk
about is this. On one hand, we're
reading about the Mishkan, the
tabernacle, the tabernacle of
space, physical space. And yet this para
brings to mind another tabernacle,
another temple, a sanctuary of time.
Again, let's let's look at just the
beginning of the para
vakil. Moshe gathers the people and he
addresses them. Again, just a little bit
of timing here. Rashi
explains this is the day after Yom
Kipur, the first Yom Kipur. Remember
what happened? There was the sin of the
golden calf and God wanted to destroy
the Jewish people and make a private
covenant with
Moshe. And Moshe refused. He didn't want
any private deals. He said, "You erase
them, erase me." And Moshe prays and he
dabbins and does and and helps to causes
Clai to do Chuva. And finally on
Roshes, God says, "Come up for the
second 40
days and bring down the second tablets
because you had broken the first
ones." And Moshe comes down. What day
does he come down with the second loot?
Yum kipur. People don't realize this.
The day of
atonement is the day that Moshe brought
down the second
loot. In some ways, it's more of a day
of receiving the Torah than even
shuos. We heard the ten
commandments. But the loot that Moshe
brought down the 17th of Thomas 40 days
after were smashed. Yum kipur the
loot the second loot. So Mosher Rabenu
brought down that second. By the way as
an aside I'm going to digress
occasionally. Let me share with you a
very beautiful thought of the mabit or
the mabit. Moshe ben Yoseph Trani was
the head of the bin ofat in the time of
Yoseph Kairo. So very very esteemed time
of the Ariza and you know this was this
is when was the dominant dominant Torah
center of Israel. So the mabit was not
only a great postk he was also a Jewish
philosopher and he wrote a work of
Jewish philosophy that has never been
translated into English. It's called
baselim the house of god and uh he makes
the following observation. It's a
well-known idea that the decalogue is
divided into two, right? The first five
are considered to be commandments
between man and
God. Uh and the second five are largely
commandments between man and man. Okay,
that's a well-known distinction although
there are some questions on that because
commandment number five for example
which should belong to the man God is
honor your father and mother. Okay, but
there are reasons because essentially
your relationship to God is connected to
your relationship to your parents who
gave you life. Okay, but the mabit goes
off on a different point. He says we
assume that the surface area of the
engraving covered the same area in the
sense that you know the surface the that
was covered that was engraved would be
the same. Now the problem is the first
five have many more
words than the second five. The second
five are very staccato. Don't kill,
don't steal, don't give false testimony.
Which means if the surface area of the
engraving was the same for the man to
man as the man to God, that means by
definition the letters of the man to man
must have been larger letters than the
man to God. So when Moshe comes down
from the mountain at Mount Si and people
see him from a distance and they put on
their long-d distanceance glasses and
they want to squint and see what he's
bringing down, what will they be able to
read
first, the manto man. So Mab makes the
point that sometimes, you know, we have
a very distorted uh idea of what it
means to be a religious Jew. We think
you know a religious Jew you wear it's
fill in you keep kosher you keep chabas
and of of course that is obviously very
important but we don't automatically
associate being honest in business
integrity kindness we kind of look at
that maybe as universal values but
they're not you know Jewish distinctly
Jewish and yet you see that the
interpersonal is even given a greater
prominence than be between man and God
because in the Luke
The second five were larger than the
first. Okay, that's my bad. Okay, but
going back to the para. So Moshe came
down on Yamiper with
the
Vel. He gathers the people is the day
after Yum
Kipper. He assembles the people and he's
now going to command them to contribute
towards the Mishkan. But before he does
that, he seems to talk about another
topic. Six days shall you work and on
the seventh day it shall be the Shabbat
of God. You shall not do any type of ma.
Don't do any type of work. Of course,
this is a reiteration of the fourth
commandment. This is not the first time
we've uh encountered Shabbat. This is at
least the third the third or the fourth
time depending on whether you count you
know Genesis as the first reference and
and the like. But Moshe is commanding
them about doing not doing sorry doing
work for six days and resting on Shabas.
Now the question is Shabas is important.
Why is it here? Why is it here exactly?
So Rashi explains that this is not just
a general exhortation about
chabas but he's specifically connected
to the Mishkan that even though I'm I'm
giving you a commandment that thou shalt
construct this
tabernacle on the day of Shabas even the
importance of building a
temple does not override the sanctity of
Shabbas. This is not just the generic
commandment of Shabas. This is a
specific
prohibition. Do not build the tabernacle
on Shabas. Not only that, but the
connection is so essential that the very
definition of what is a prohibited
labor are those activities that are
involved in building the tabernacle. The
the famous idea that there are 39
prohibited categories of work on Shabas.
You know, the Torah doesn't say there
are a few activities the Torah mentions.
The Torah says don't start a
fire. Uh it mentions uh don't uh plow,
don't harvest. But you know, if I ask
you where does the Torah say don't cook
on Shabbat, don't write on Shabas.
Doesn't say. The only way we know these
things are prohibited is because these
were activities that were connected to
the construction of the tabernacle in
various ways. And therefore whatever is
involved in the construction of the
mishkun is forbidden and
shut. So what is often expressed
is that the mishkun represents the
holiness of
time. I'm sorry. The mishkun is holiness
of space. The
shabas is holiness of time.
And the that you don't build a Mishka on
Shabas actually says Judaism is more
concerned on the deepest level with the
holiness of
time more than the holiness of space
because the holiness of time you can
take with you wherever you go in life.
You see this is a certain paradox in
Judaism. On one hand, we say God is
everywhere. God is accessible
everywhere. In a sense, God exists as
much in uh uh Fargo, North Dakota as he
exists in the Bas Mikdash. God is
everywhere. On the other hand, Judaism
obviously has a certain
hierarchy of holy space. Arit Israel is
holier than any other place.
Ba mikdash within the basa mikdash even
there are many many levels till you come
to the keshak dash so there's a certain
paradox in which on one hand god
transcends
place on the other hand there are
special places and the understanding is
when I say a given place is holier that
doesn't mean god is here more than there
god is everywhere but it means it's more
god is more accessible to my ability to
receive him. Meaning just like you have
a cell phone, right? There are dead
zones which can't receive. So God is
everywhere. The sound waves are
everywhere but I can't pick them up. So
the holiness of a mcome is a function of
the ability to access that connection.
But be it as it may, although we of
course believe that places are holier
than other places, no question about it.
But there's a subtle Yateserhara,
there's a subtle evil
inclination in that type of thought.
That is sometimes when people are not in
optimal in the optimal situation, they
feel they can't have a connection to
God. For example, a person might say,
"Oh, if I would be if only I would be in
Jerusalem. If only I would be in
yeshiva. If only I would have the right
family. If only I would have the right
circumstances, then I can serve
God. But what does God want of me if I'm
bereft of all of those
things? That's a
mistake. Because once you understand
that the holiness of time transcends the
holiness of space, then it doesn't make
a difference where you are. The ability
to access God everywhere. every Shabbat
I have my beta mikdash within time and
that is why the expresses itself that
the building of the I'm sorry that the
yeah the building of the mikdash or the
mishkan cannot be done on chabas because
shabas represents a temple a mikdash a
connection to god that is even higher
and more transcendent than the holiness
of space right the holiness of time
versus the holiness of of space and that
is why Mosher Rabenu introduces the idea
of
Shabas. Now, not as I say as a general
repetition of the fourth commandment,
but specifically because of its
connection to the uh to the uh to the
Mish. Now what's what's interesting is
and by the way there are many you know
as you know I mean the Torah is
interpreted in 70 ways and you know
every single word in the Torah has so
many different nuances of meaning you
know even something like uh do not burn
a fire on the day of Shabbat. So so I
want to tell you a little story. I may
have said it before so forgive me. Uh
this happened when I was uh you know I
grew up in Hartford, Connecticut and I
went to an Orthodox day school but it
was a co-ed day school and most of the
kids were not even shar Shabas in those
days because this was before Salman
Shakra this is before the conservative
movement had their day school. So any
parent conservative reform or orthodox
who wanted their kids to have a Jewish
education sent them to the Orthodox
schools. So the Orthodox schools were
not as stratified or polarized as they
are today because we went to school with
everybody. So when I was in seventh
grade, that's when uh the boys and the
girls started having their bar mitzvah
and bas mitzvah. So I remember that I
was invited to a classmate's bar mitzvah
in a reformed synagogue. I'm not going
to address the issue then. I wasn't uh
thinking about it in those terms, but
the reformed synagogue was like five a
fivemile walk from my house in the
summer and Hartford did not have an AIF
then. So I was walking, of course, I was
I was in better shape then. I was
younger. Uh and I'm walking and all of a
sudden a car stops by my seventh grade
teacher stops by and says, "Can I give
you a ride?" who who's a Jewish woman,
very very fine woman. Actually, she died
recently at like 102. So, she just died
very recently. But, uh, she stopped and
offered me a ride. And I said, "Well, I
can't really go." She says, "Why can't
you go? what's what what's so I started
saying I was like 12 so I started saying
well you know we're not allowed to do
work on Shabas and if I go my extra
weight is going to cause more
consumption of gasoline and that's
called a fire on Shabas and you know
we're supposed to rest and we're not
supposed to do work so so she says to me
so let me get this straight you're
telling me you can't go into an air
conditioned car that's going to take you
to the place you need to in 2 minutes
because that's called doing work. So
instead, you're going to walk five miles
without water and that's not called
doing work. She says, "I don't get it."
So at that point, I was kind of confused
and flustered. So I kind of just I just
kind of got myself out of there. But you
know, you know, it's not a bad
question. What's going on here? Yeah. I
go into a car, my weight is going to
cause a certain minuscule consumption of
gasoline that is fire. Got it. But
you're telling me walking 5 miles
without water in the heat? That's not
work. That's okay. Like what's going on?
And you know, people always raise the
question, too. Well, in the olden days,
I'm sure you've heard this, in the olden
days, making a fire required, you know,
rubbing two sticks together for an hour.
Now, what are you saying? flicking an
electric light you know it's fire what
you know it's not work so the important
idea here and this is a generally
important idea to keep in mind is Rabi
Shimshin Rafal Hersh the great 19th
century uh uh German rabbi uh actually
explains that the operative word uh for
not doing prohibited things on Shabbat
which
is which we often translate as work or
labor he says is a bit of a misnomer
Because the definition of mala is not a
function of physical exertion but it's a
function of mastery or
dominion over the raw materials of God's
creation. Uh meaning to say the
following. God made the world in six
days. He rested on the seventh day.
Every Shabbat is a
celebration that God is the creator and
architect of the universe. So what I
refrain from on Shabbat is exercising my
creative
dominion over the raw materials of the
universe and therefore of the world.
Therefore of her says the very
definition of mala involves a certain
amount of creative control whether it's
uh plowing, planting, harvesting,
grinding, cooking, skinning an animal,
sewing things. What's going on here is
not the work in the sense of physical
effort but the transformation of the raw
material into something. Uh that's why
under Torah law, without getting into
all the a purely destructive act, if you
simply blow up a building for no
constructive purpose, you just want to
get rid of a building and you don't plan
to do anything positive on the site. As
much exertion as that may have taken, it
is not a mala under Torah law. It's
forbidden rabbitically. Uh but it's not
mala because malika requires some
constructive activity. So as a result
when people make the argument, oh why is
turning on a switch uh there's no
physical effort. If anything it ought to
be worse. It shows a greater mastery, a
greater control, a greater dominion over
the raw materials of of the universe.
Fire itself, the use of fire. Fire is
one of the great media that transforms
raw materials into finished products and
and and the like. So Malaka again refers
has um
a bit of an idiosyncratic linguistic
system. I mean obviously maka and melik
are not related. They're two different
roots. But raers has an opinion if they
share common letters you can unite them.
And therefore melik which is dominion
and maka which is work or labor share
those common letters and therefore the
common denominator of mala is dominion
and control over the raw materials of
nature. Right? This is uh Rafers's idea
of maha and that's a very useful
definition because it reminds you that
the issue is not physical exertion. The
issue is creative mastery over the world
because I refrain from that mastery to
acknowledge that God is the source of
creation.
Interestingly enough, and this is
fascinating, uh the one mastery that is
permitted on Shabbat might be the
greatest creative act of all, and that's
the creation of life, right? The marital
intimacy of husband and wife is
permitted on Shabbat, even though you
might wind up creating a child. And that
of course would be the most godly form
of creation there is. And yet, precisely
there, God is inviting you to become his
partner. So there are some
inconsistencies here but the
inconsistencies themselves are quite
beautiful and that is on Shabbat we also
on one hand we acknowledge God's mastery
and at the same time we acknowledge
God's partnership invitation to kind of
be a partner with him in the creation of
of the world. So, uh, Shabbat is a very,
very, very big deal. Needless to say,
you know, the, um, the chief rabbi of
South Africa, Rabbi Goldstein has
created a wonderful project for the past
few years, uh, Shabbat project in which
he's trying to get a million Jews to
keep Shabbat throughout the world, and
they designate a Shabbat for that. And
you know uh you
know the Usher Ginsburg who was not an
Orthodox Jew at all. He's a famous
Zionist thinker but he went by the pen
name. Uh cultural Zionist as opposed to
political Zionist. Again he differed
with Herzel on a number of things but
Akadam did make the famous statement
more than the Jews have kept the Shabbas
Shabas has kept the Jewish people. And
uh there's no no there's no question of
the centrality of Shabbat. And we have
to think in our own lives. And this is
sometimes a little bit of a challenge
for religious people here because you
know when you're new to
Shabbat, everything is special.
Everything is wonderful. Everything is
unique, exciting. But you keep Shabbat
one year, two years, 3 years, four
years, 10 years, 50 years. You know at
some point it becomes habitual. It
becomes second nature which is good. But
on the other hand we can sometimes lack
the enthusiasm. We can sometimes lack
the
passion. You know uh people know or
where I teach is largely a yeshiva for
beginners or returnees to Judaism. And
sometimes famous rabbis come to our
sumak people who have been religious
their whole lives and they'll say I wish
I could be a balshua too. I wish I could
also be someone who returns to Judaism
with that great great passion. Right? So
that should also give people a certain
amount of strength because sometimes
going back to the idea that sometimes a
person might be ashamed of their
background. A person might say or or at
least they feel bad. They say, "Oh, gee,
this guy was raised to be a religious
Jew his whole life, and he always went
to yeshiva, and I didn't start till I
was 20 or
25. How can I ever catch up? It's not
fair that God put me in, let's say, a
non-tora environment. You know, where's
the justice in that?"
But the answer is a subtle answer and
that is it's
true that we don't have what the you
know the 10th generation Yami
has but it's also true that the person
from Fargo North Dakota has something
that the 10th generation Yami doesn't
have meaning to say. Every person was
put where they were put because that's
what their naman needed to connect to
God. Meaning even the years where you
were away from Judaism or were not
connected to Judaism are not dead
time in a sense they are the fertilizer
so to speak out of which the identity is
formed. That's why again forgive me for
digressing because different thoughts
come to me.
That's
why sometimes one of the things that
people do when they sometimes become
religious is they want to cut off their
past. They want to because they want to
become part of a new community. They
want to make believe that that didn't
exist or they're not connected to it.
And that would suggest that that's a
very big
mistake because if you're kind of doing
chuva out of
amputation, then you're an
amputee. Now, an
amputee, no matter how good and capable
they are, is missing
something. But there's a higher level of
chuva where you don't amputate the past,
but you use the past to form the
uniqueness of who you are.
Therefore, you draw on Fargo, North
Dakota and you draw on those
experiences to form your identity in a
constructive way. And coming back to
Shabbat, that may be very good example.
The the the newcomer to Shabbat brings
enthusiasm and passion. But the habitual
Shabbat observer has a big challenge and
we have to find ways to create renewal,
excitement. It's not enough just to be
Shabas observant although that's very
very important but we have to figure out
ways that Shabbat becomes that special
day of our unique connection to God. You
know in the states a few years ago
somebody uh was trying to devise a
hakically permissible way to text
message on Shabbat. Very complicated
theory. The truth is I'm not going to
get into here. uh the theories were not
hakically proper. But let's assume let's
assume some
genius could invent a hakically
permissible way to text on chabas. Let's
assume that somehow somebody figured it
out. Is that what you want to do? Is
that what you want to do? You want to
take the Shabbat, which is the one day
in which we can escape all of this and
leave virtual reality in favor of actual
reality. reality reality and you say,
you know, I invented this great
invention. I can make Shabbat just like
Tuesday, huh? You know, that's the
progress of 3,000 years of Jewish
history. We've converted
Shabbat to be everything you do during
the week, you know. So, we got to we got
to we got to think about this very very
carefully. So, one thing I wanted to
share with you is a little bit of an
observation on the prayers of
Shabbat.
Uh, you know, let's take the Amida.
Shabbat is actually very unique of all
of the
holidays, including Rashana, Yamipper,
Pesak, Shvu, Sukus. With all of the
holidays, the
amida of Marav, the evening prayer,
Shakis, the morning prayer, and Mina
Musaf is different, but the the three
shak shaka is always the same. It's
identical. There is never a change
between arvit to shak to mka. The only
and this is even true in yam kipper. No
matter what the day is, it is always the
same.
Mida the only sacred
day in which there's a different middle
in the Amida at least the beginning of
it is Shabas that Shabas has a beginning
paragraph that is unique for Arvit and
then another one for Shak and then
another one for MA.
Friday night uh we begin with a
paragraph that you have sanctified
Shabbat and we recite that God made the
world in six days and he rested. Shabbat
morning we talk about Moshe bringing
down the l and we recite the verses b is
which is actually last week's para b is
keep the shabbat and then
shabas we talk about you are one and
your name is one and who is like your
nation Israel one unique nation in the
world different a different pika a
different opening paragraph for mariff
Now it then has the same concluding
paragraph with with one difference I'll
get to uh accept our rest and it ends
with purify our hearts and blessed are
Shabbas who sanctify Shabas that's the
same in all of them with one difference
I I'll get to even on that but the first
paragraph is different so I want to just
share with you two different although
inter related a little bit two different
interpretations s about uh the different
prayers of Shabbat. The first is from
Ravid Avraham. David Avraham was a rish,
a medieval uh rabbi in Spain who
specialized in liturgy. In fact, the
works of the Abu Draam as he's called uh
is one of the definitive works on the
Jewish calendar and the Jewish liturgy.
effect of my earlier remarks about
vayako pakout why they're together and
when they're separate is from the aburam
itself who talks about the rules about
joining the parot and the aburam says a
very striking idea he says that the
stages of shabbat correspond to the
stages of marital
intimacy marital
connection is considered to be a wedding
Now it's interesting that in Cabala it's
portrayed as a wedding on two different
levels. We almost become
androgynous. In one image, Shabbat is
the
queen and we are the male uniting with
the queen of Shabbat. Shabbat
Mala. In another image, we are the kala.
We are the bride and we're uniting with
God. So it's like God is the groom, we
are the bride or we are the groom and
Shabbat is the bride like that double
marriage is is uh taking place. That is
the basis of the song we sing Friday
night from
Alabets. Come my my good friend, my
beloved friend, right?
uh to greet the
bride. P Shabbat. Let us welcome the
Shabbat. Who is the bride? The bride is
Shabbat. And by the way, who is the
beloved friend? It's not just your next
door neighbor. It's God. God is the
beloved one that we're coming together
with Hashem to welcome the Shabbat.
Okay. Now in a in a Jewish marriage
there's actually three stages although
we tend to collapse them. There is what
is called ausin which is which is
betrothel I don't mean engagement
engagement then but I mean in the time
in the time of the Torah and even the
time of the gamorrah the katan would
give the kala a ring or something a
monetary value would say you are betrod
to me and she would be married but the
marriage wouldn't be consummated for a
year. Today we don't wait that long
anymore. So stage number one is
betrothal. That is called
ausin. Another word for a sin is kushian
sanctification. So how does the Friday
night prayer
begin? You have sanctified us. So Friday
night is ausen the beginning of a
relationship.
The next which in the time of the Torah
and Kazal occurred a year later but
today we do it almost immediately is
Nissin in which the katan brings the
kala into his home. This would be the
room which is symbolically the the home
and that's the sim the primary simka is
not ausen it's nuin and therefore the
second stage is a higher level of simka.
How does the chakras prayer
begin? Moshe, Moshe
rejoices. And the third level is actual
intimacy and union. When we become one,
husband and wife become one. What does
the MKA say? God is one. We are one.
Union with God. So this is very
striking. The AuRam is looking at
Shabbat as a continuous and deepening
process of
marriage with God in which we start with
the
ausin. We progress to the Nissu
in and we culminate in the Yehud in the
complete oneness and unity. So by the
time you finish
Shabbat you feel one with that's the
trajectory and that's why there's a
sadness right the
uh customarily the theim the songs that
are
sungit tend to be a bit pensive slow
there's a certain yearning
quality because Shabbat is leaving you
in
Abdullah we have to of spices. Why?
Because I'm losing my extra soul. I feel
faint. I feel weak. I'm not ready for
the challenges of the week, frankly. Uh
and that's why Abdullah begins with at
least for
Ashkanazim. God is my salvation. I shall
not be
afraid. It's a puss, but what what do
you mean I should not be afraid? It's
it's God telling you, you know,
listen. I know it's very scary to leave
Shabbat and be confronted with the
challenges of the
world. A lot of what you think you
acquired in the Shabbat, you can lose
very
simply. But don't be afraid. Shabbat
gives you strength. Shabbat gives you
courage. Shabbat gives you the ability
to go
on as you face the new world.
Don't be
afraid. Shabbat is with you. As the
tradition says, Sunday, Monday, Tuesday,
you're still living off the spiritual
aura of
Shabbat. In fact, even according to if
you didn't
make Saturday night, you can still make
it Sunday, Monday, Tuesday till
sunset. Ah, but Wednesday, I'm bereft.
Don't worry about that. God is giving
you an advance on the coming Shabbat.
Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, is getting
nourishment from the new Shabbat. So,
you're never too far away from Shabbat,
giving you that strength. So, this is
the Yu Draham who looks at this as a
marriage. Let me share with you a
thought of the tour. The Tor gives
somewhat of a different idea. He
says there are three pivotal
Shabbat in Jewish existence. Two of them
are past and one of them is future. The
first Shabbat is God created the world
or God rested from creating the world.
That's called Shabbat Bit. The Shabbat
of the creation of the world. The second
pivotal
Shabbat is the Shabbat of the giving of
the Torah. According to the Gomorrah and
Ms Shabas, we heard the ten commandments
on
Shabas. The first shas was
Shabas. So there's Shabas Matan Shabas,
the Shabas of
creation. There is the Shabbat of
revelation. And then the final Shabbat
is not here yet.
It is the Shabbat of redemption, the
messianic period, which is described
indeed as Yom Shakulo Shabbat, the day
of the eternal Shabbat. We haven't
gotten there yet. Now many of you might
be familiar with France France
Rosenfik's uh famous book the star of
redemption in which he actually says in
his analysis again it's not I wouldn't
call it a an authoritative aluckic
source or orthodox source but he writes
that the three pillars of redemption the
three pillars of Judaism are that
creation revelation redemption I'm not
sure if he got this from the Torah or
not but the Torah says
This is the theme of the three dominics.
Friday night, which brings the paragraph
by from
Genesis, is celebrating the Shabbat of
creation. Shabbat morning when Moshe
brings down the
tablets. It's the Shabbat of Revelation.
and Shabas MKA which talks about the
unity between man and God is the Shabbat
of redemption the Shabbat of the
Messianic Shabbat and what how is the
days of Msiah described by Zakaria we
say it every three times a day in
Aleno God will be one and his name will
be one that's exactly what you're saying
in the makabat
creation, revelation, redemption. So,
Avu, again, these are interrelated. I'm
not saying they're totally different
thoughts. Abu Dram looks at it as stages
in a
marriage. The Torah looks at it as
moving from creation, revelation,
redemption. So I would like just to add
to the tour uh a certain point and that
is this
journey from creation revelation
redemption is not just
a national journey of ami
Israel but it's actually a journey that
each and every one of us can go through
every single
Shabbat. The first step to our Shabbat
experience is we feel we're reborn.
We're recreated. We kind of relieve all
of the pressures of the work world.
We're like, I'm created. I'm liberated.
I'm like a newborn baby doesn't have all
of the worries and anxieties. You know,
Herman Welk uh Fasham was not alive
anymore. He died over 100. Um he was an
Orthodox Jew, very very famous writer,
playwright and uh he was an Orthodox Jew
and he actually wrote quite quite fine a
book about uh being an Orthodox Jew. Uh
this is my God and the second edition
was reissued just shortly before his
death. and he tells a story that um his
when his first uh novel I think the Cain
Mutiny was going to be produced as a
Broadway play which for him was a
tremendous thing. This was like 1950s
whatever it was and they were working 18
hours around the clock to get it ready
for Broadway and it was going to open
Saturday night. So, Friday afternoon
around 200 p.m., he goes to the
co-producer and says, "Um, I got to go
now." The co-producer figured he was
going for a cup of coffee. He says,
"Well, be back in 20 minutes." He says,
"No, you don't understand. I'm going for
28 hours. Uh, it was going to open up
8:00 p.m. Shabas was over like 6,
whatever it is. I'll be here like an
hour before opening."
So he he says the
co-producer didn't even know what to
say. He just didn't
understand how can you just
leave 25 hours or whatever before this
play is going to open. And Herman Welk
said it that was the first time he
realized he had been shabas observant
but he realized what shabas is. Shabbas
liberates you. Unless it's literally a
matter of life and death, in which case
life and death override Shabbat. But if
it's not life or death, just say no. The
world cannot make its demands on me.
That's the first stage. Creation. I'm
created. I don't have those past
responsibilities. Ah, but that's not
enough.
Just like Passover Pes is meaningless
unless it's connected to which is
commitment to
God in the Shabbat. You see the same
idea. Being liberated from your weekly
chores is a beautiful thing. By the way,
this may explain why people are so
physically exhausted Friday night
because it's like almost a universal law
of nature because the work has been
lifted and the adrenaline can get turned
off and as a result your natural state
of exhaustion comes to the four because
you don't have that artificial push
that's pushing you to keep on going.
Well, I have to say if you're a rabbi,
it might be a little different, but
okay. Uh, Shabas is a working. Okay,
well, I'm not gonna gripe here. Okay,
not gonna use this as a gripe session,
but okay. But be but here is the
relationship between Friday night and
Shabbat
day. Friday night, I'm
liberated. Shabas day, I'm ready to
focus my
liberation towards a
commitment to God's Torah, which is
revelation. Again, it's very symmetrical
to the relationship of PES and PES is
freedom. Is commitment. You need the two
that go together. This, I would suggest,
is the inner meaning of creation and li
I'm sorry. Yeah. Creation, liberation,
and revelation. Now, we then come to
redemption. Now, redemption of course
refers to the messianic redemption, but
I think there's also an individualistic
idiosyncratic redemption that's involved
here. That is it is said in the name of
many many masters. Some say it in the
name of breast, some say in the name of
the balm. Uh that the greatest distance
in the world is between the head and the
heart right the head may know many
truths. Intellectually I may know many
many
things but I haven't yet brought it into
my heart to move me emotionally and
spiritually.
And in many ways when we talk about
redemption from
galut galut can exist on many many
levels. There is the galut from the
land. There is the galot of estrangement
from
family. There is arangement within
yourself separation from God. The inner
disconnect between my mind and my heart.
And when we talk about unity and in the
Mina, we're talking about achieving a
redemption in which all of the
disunities come together in a harmonious
home. And therefore, the tour's journey
of
creation to revelation to redemp to
redemption is the trajectory that each
and every one of us can go through.
Every Shabbat we start with being
liberated. We then focus on being
committed and
directed and we then culminate with
integration,
wholesomeness, bringing everything
together in a harmonious whole. You know
the expression uh a person is in the
zone. Uh sometimes uh it may happen
relatively rarely. You just feel you're
in the right place. And even if you're
working very hard, it could be could be
in a project, could be anything. You're
working very hard. But you don't even
feel you have to eat. You don't even
have to sleep. You're just you're in the
right place. And that happens when
everything is in sync. Everything's
synchronized. The emotions, the mind,
the heart. You're working at a different
level because you're connecting to God
with all your cylinders, not just, you
know, hanging on here and there. And
that is the final gift of Shabbat, at
least in potential. I'm not saying we
reach it that often, but at least in
potential
uh
Shabbat is the time when you kind of
integrate and bring everything together.
Now these thoughts are just part of um
you know an infinite richness of the
Shabbat. But I think it just reminds us
that we can't take it for granted. Yes,
Shabbat has a role in sleeping. Sleeping
is a good thing in Shabbat too. It says
uh and I remember when I came you know
as a kid you know kids don't sleep
really in the afternoon. So uh when I
came to yeshiva near Israel in Baltimore
as a ninth grader I had never slept on
Shabba's afternoon before.
And then Shabbas, I I still remember my
first Shabbat, I was absolutely going
nuts because nobody was every single
person in yeshiva was taking a nap for
Shabbat. I was wandering the halls like
looking for somebody to talk to. There
was
nobody, right? So sleeping was very
foreign to me. But by the second week, I
I I picked up the habit, you know. Uh so
uh I was a quick learner in that in that
in that way. So yes, Shabbat does have
of course rest, sleep, eat well, all of
that is is part of the joy absolutely.
But at the same time recognize the
enormous
spirituality of what Shabbat can give
you and never ever ever take it for
granted. Hashem says to us, I have given
you a precious treasure in your midst
and Shabbat is its name. So may all of
us merit, I speaking to myself, may all
of us merit to appreciate the matana
tova that hashem has given us. So thank
you. I do have to run, but thank you so
much for coming and have a shabbat.
[Music]
You see
your de
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